• Title/Summary/Keyword: heat removal

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An Analysis on the Material Removal Mechanism of Chemical-Mechanical Polishing Process Part I: Coupled Integrated Material Removal Modeling (화학-기계적 연마 공정의 물질제거 메커니즘 해석 Part I: 연성 통합 모델링)

  • Seok, Jong-Won;Oh, Seung-Hee;Seok, Jong-Hyuk
    • Journal of the Semiconductor & Display Technology
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    • v.6 no.2 s.19
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    • pp.35-40
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    • 2007
  • An integrated material removal model considering thermal, chemical and contact mechanical effects in CMP process is proposed. These effects are highly coupled together in the current modeling effort. The contact mechanics is employed in the model incorporated with the heat transfer and chemical reaction mechanisms. The mechanical abrasion actions happening due to the mechanical contacts between the wafer and abrasive particles in the slurry and between the wafer and pad asperities cause friction and consequently generate heats, which mainly acts as the heat source accelerating chemical reaction(s) between the wafer and slurry chemical(s). The proposed model may be a help in understanding multi-physical interactions in CMP process occurring among the wafer, pad and various consumables such as slurry.

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A Study of Thermal and Chemical Quenching of Premixed Flame by Flame-Surface Interaction (화염-표면 상호작용에 의한 예혼합 화염의 열소염 및 화학소염에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Kyu-Tae;Lee, Dae-Hoon;Kwon, Se-Jin
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2005
  • Incomplete combustion due to quenching in a narrow confinement has been a major problem for realization of a reliable micro combustion device. In most micro combustors, effects of flows are absent in the quenching because the flow is laminar and no severe stretch is present. In such circumstance, quenching is caused either by heat loss or by removal of active radicals to the wall surface of the confinement. An experimental investigation was carried out to investigate the relative significance of these two causes of quenching of a premixed flame. A premixed jet burner with a rectangular cross section at the exit was built. At the burner exit, the flame stands between two walls with adjustable distance. The gap between the two walls at which quenching occurs was measured at different wall surface conditions. The results were analyzed to estimate the relative significance of heat loss to the wall and the removal of radicals at the surface. The measurements indicated that the quenching distance was independent of the wall surface characteristics such as oxygen vacancy, grain boundary, or impurities at low temperature. At high temperature, however, the surface characteristics strongly affect the quenching distance, implying that radical removal at the wall plays a significant role in the quenching process.

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Application of S-HGMS and chemical coupling technology in river water treatment

  • Zhao, Xin;Li, Su-qin;Han, Shuai-shuai;Zhang, Peng;Jin, Jian-jiang;Guo, Peng-hui
    • Progress in Superconductivity and Cryogenics
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.12-16
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    • 2020
  • Circulating cooling systems consume a lot of water, and most of the water from river, which contains a large amount of Ca2+, Mg2+, et al, and has the characteristics of high hardness and large turbidity. The water can form scale on the surface of the heat exchanger and the pipes, which would reduce the heat transfer efficiency and affect the heat exchanger's length of service. In this study, the Superconducting High Gradient Magnetic Separation (S-HGMS) technology was used in river water treatment and the effects of agent A, agent B, and S-HGMS on the removal of hardness and turbidity were discussed. The results showed that the hardness removal rate reached 71.3% and the turbidity was decreased to 0.5 NTU.

AN EVALUATION OF THE APERIODIC AND FLUCTUATING INSTABILITIES FOR THE PASSIVE RESIDUAL HEAT REMOVAL SYSTEM OF AN INTEGRAL REACTOR

  • Kang Han-Ok;Lee Yong-Ho;Yoon Ju-Hyeon
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.38 no.4
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    • pp.343-352
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    • 2006
  • Convenient analytical tools for evaluation of the aperiodic and the fluctuating instabilities of the passive residual heat removal system (PRHRS) of an integral reactor are developed and results are discussed from the viewpoint of the system design. First, a static model for the aperiodic instability using the system hydraulic loss relation and the downcomer feedwater heating equations is developed. The calculated hydraulic relation between the pressure drop and the feedwater flow rate shows that several static states can exist with various numbers of water-mode feedwater module pipes. It is shown that the most probable state can exist by basic physical reasoning, that there is no flow rate through the steam-mode feedwater module pipes. Second, a dynamic model for the fluctuating instability due to steam generation retardation in the steam generator and the dynamic interaction of two compressible volumes, that is, the steam volume of the main steam pipe lines and the gas volume of the compensating tank is formulated and the D-decomposition method is applied after linearization of the governing equations. The results show that the PRHRS becomes stabilized with a smaller volume compensating tank, a larger volume steam space and higher hydraulic resistance of the path $a_{ct}$. Increasing the operating steam pressure has a stabilizing effect. The analytical model and the results obtained from this study will be utilized for PRHRS performance improvement.

Simulation and transient analyses of a complete passive heat removal system in a downward cooling pool-type material testing reactor against a complete station blackout and long-term natural convection mode using the RELAP5/3.2 code

  • Hedayat, Afshin
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.49 no.5
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    • pp.953-967
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    • 2017
  • In this paper, a complete station blackout (SBO) or complete loss of electrical power supplies is simulated and analyzed in a downward cooling 5-MW pool-type Material Testing Reactor (MTR). The scenario is traced in the absence of active cooling systems and operators. The code nodalization is successfully benchmarked against experimental data of the reactor's operating parameters. The passive heat removal system includes downward water cooling after pump breakdown by the force of gravity (where the coolant streams down to the unfilled portion of the holdup tank), safety flapper opening, flow reversal from a downward to an upward cooling direction, and then the upward free convection heat removal throughout the flapper safety valve, lower plenum, and fuel assemblies. Both short-term and long-term natural core cooling conditions are simulated and investigated using the RELAP5 code. Short-term analyses focus on the safety flapper valve operation and flow reversal mode. Long-term analyses include simulation of both complete SBO and long-term operation of the free convection mode. Results are promising for pool-type MTRs because this allows operators to investigate RELAP code abilities for MTR thermal-hydraulic simulations without any oscillation; moreover, the Tehran Research Reactor is conservatively safe against the complete SBO and long-term free convection operation.

Design and transient analysis of a compact and long-term-operable passive residual heat removal system

  • Wooseong Park;Yong Hwan Yoo;Kyung Jun Kang;Yong Hoon Jeong
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.55 no.12
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    • pp.4335-4349
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    • 2023
  • Nuclear marine propulsion has been emerging as a next generation carbon-free power source, for which proper passive residual heat removal systems (PRHRSs) are needed for long-term safety. In particular, the characteristics of unlimited operation time and compact design are crucial in maritime applications due to the difficulties of safety aids and limited space. Accordingly, a compact and long-term-operable PRHRS has been proposed with the key design concept of using both air cooling and seawater cooling in tandem. To confirm its feasibility, this study conducted system design and a transient analysis in an accident scenario. Design results indicate that seawater cooling can considerably reduce the overall system size, and thus the compact and long-term-operable PRHRS can be realized. Regarding the transient analysis, the Multi-dimensional Analysis of Reactor Safety (MARS-KS) code was used to analyze the system behavior under a station blackout condition. Results show that the proposed design can satisfy the design requirements with a sufficient margin: the coolant temperature reached the safe shutdown condition within 36 h, and the maximum cooling rate did not exceed 40 ℃/h. Lastly, it was assessed that both air cooling and seawater cooling are necessary for achieving long-term operation and compact design.

MIDLOOP Code Analysis of a ROSA-IV/LSTF Experiment for the Loss of Residual Heat Removal System Event During Mid- loop Operation

  • Han, Kee-Soo;Lee, Cheol-Sin;Park, Chul-Jin;Kim, Hee-Cheol
    • Proceedings of the Korean Nuclear Society Conference
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    • 1996.05b
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    • pp.683-690
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    • 1996
  • The MIDLOOP code has been developed for the evaluation of RES pressurization transients initiated from a loss-of-Residual Heat Removal System (RHRS) during mid-loop operation after reactor shutdown. It provides a fast running and realistic tool for studying parametrically the response of important plant parameters such as pressure, temperature, and level to various plant combinations of the primary side vent, makeup, and leakage procedures and the steam generator (SG) conditions. The code consists of ten nodes representing the primary and secondary sides of a nuclear power plant and can analyze the effect of air on the primary system pressurization and primary to secondary heat transfer. The analysis results of the MIDLOOP code are in good agreement with the ROSA-IV/LSTF experiment without opening in the RCS.

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STUDIES ON FARMER HOUSEHOLD LEVEL SOLAR GREENHOUSE DRYING UNIT

  • Chen, Yu-Bai;Liu, Dao-Bei
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Agricultural Machinery Conference
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    • 1993.10a
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    • pp.912-921
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    • 1993
  • A small scale solar greenhouse tray dryer suitable for one or few farmer households is designed in place of sunny ground to dry various agricultural products. The tests on the drying of paddy, groundnut and radish slices by this drying unit have been made. The results indicated that this drying unit had a good heat collecting property, a low heat consumption (4518.7-5676.1 KJ per kg water removal) , a high heat utilizing efficiency (43.75%-54,25%) , a low operation cost (0.057 kwh-0.078 kwh per kg water removal) and good drying quality.

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Counter-Current Flow Limit in Narrow Gap (간극에서의 역방향 유동 제한 현상 연구)

  • Kim, Yong-Hoon;Suh, Kune-Y.
    • Proceedings of the KIEE Conference
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    • 1998.11c
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    • pp.1054-1060
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    • 1998
  • Previous counter-current flow limitation (CCFL) and critical heat flux (CHF) studies included investigations on the inlet entrance, inclined channel and gap effects for the most part. In this study, the local CHF correlation was presented to be used in the numerical analysis for the 3 dimensional hemispherical geometry. Also, first-principle analyses were performed to determine the maximum heat removal capability from the debris through the gap that may be formed during a core melt accident. The maximum heat removal capability by gap cooling can be applied in quantitatively assessing the severe accident management measures.

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The Distribution of Temperature on Pad Surface During CMP Process (CMP 공정중 패드 표면의 온도분포에 관한 연구)

  • Jeong, Young-Seok;Kim, Hyoung-Jae;Jeong, Hae-Do
    • Proceedings of the KSME Conference
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    • 2003.04a
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    • pp.1283-1288
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    • 2003
  • The friction heat generated by the CMP process hasinfluence on removal rate and WIWNU(Within Wafer Non-Uniformity). Therefore, the object of this study is to find the distribution of temperature on pad surface during CMP process. To do this, the authors analyse the kinematics of CMP equipment to verify the sources of friction heat and compare the analysis result with the experimental results. Through the analysis and experiment conducted in this paper, we can predict the distribution of polishing temperature across the pad surface. Furthermore the result could help to predict the process conditions which could enhance the polishing results, such as WIWNU and removal rate of thin film to achieve more efficient process.

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